Millard Fillmore Famous Quotes & Sayings
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Top Millard Fillmore Famous Quotes

For those who are just clawing, struggling and fighting to get that little scrap of the good life you know you deserve...
I know it's hard. Somedays, you question why you're even doing it at all. Yet you don't give up and you push through another day.
You're almost there.
Don't give up yet. I believe in you. — Jasemine Denise

Everything Tolstoy wrote is precious, but I found this final statement of the truth about life as he had come to understand it particularly beautiful and moving. 'That is what I have wanted to say to you, my brothers. Before I died.' So he concludes, giving one a vivid sense of the old man, pen in hand and bent over the paper, his forehead wrinkled into a look of puzzlement very characteristic of him, as though he were perpetually wondering how others could fail to see what was to him so clear - that the law of love explained all mysteries and invalidated all other laws. — Malcolm Muggeridge

Any writer who has difficulty in writing is probably not onto his true subject, but wasting time with false, petty goals; as soon as you connect with your true subject you will write. — Joyce Carol Oates

The teacher must herself be excited if she is to sell her goods. And she can do an exciting job in stirring the student without herself knowing all the answers. — Julius Sumner Miller

It's more important to put the own heart in the prayer than to put other's words with nothing of the own heart. — Mahatma Gandhi

Why is it that everything I eat when I'm with you is so delicious?' I laughed. 'Could it be that you're satisfying hunger and lust at the same time? — Banana Yoshimoto

There are no limits to starting over. That's why the sun rises every day. Unless you're running in circles and then the outcome never changes. — Karen White

All you can take with you is that which you've given away. — George Bailey

I have a great amount of respect for the audience. They know narrative construct. They know all the tropes. — Paul Scheuring

Generations are as the days of toilsome mankind; death and birth are the vesper and the matin bells that summon mankind to sleep and to rise refreshed for new advancement. What the father has made, the son can make and enjoy; but has also work of his own appointed him. Thus all things wax and roll onwards: arts, establishments, opinions, nothing is ever completed, but ever completing. — Thomas Carlyle